Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Eighteenth Anniversary of the September 11 Terrorist Attacks; Defeat the Taliban to Prevent Another


           On this eighteenth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks on the World Trade Center in New York, the Pentagon in Virginia and over the skies of Pennsylvania, we Americans remember the nearly three thousand people who were massacred by Islamist al-Qaeda terrorists. 

We recall the heroism of the civilians who resisted the hijackers on Flight 93 and the bravery of the first responders, many of whom sacrificed their lives or were seriously injured.  We also think of the rescue-workers who died or who are still suffering from exposure to the unhealthy air over the rubble of the Twin Towers.

It is also appropriate to thank the many public policy-making officials, military servicemen, intelligence agents, federal and state law enforcement officers and civilians who have contributed to the success of the United States and its allies in the Global War on Terrorism that has prevented another September 11-scale attack.

Although reduced, the threat of al-Qaeda and other Islamist terrorists and militant jihadis around the world to Americans and others remains, especially from smaller-scale attacks.  Since the U.S. and its allies, including the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, overthrew the Taliban de facto Afghan regime that had provided safe haven to al-Qaeda, which had plotted the attacks from Afghanistan, the Taliban has tried to regain power.  Backed by the American-led coalition, Afghanistan has tried to keep the Taliban from power to prevent it from becoming a safe haven again for Islamist terrorists.  The U.S. and its allies have withdrawn a significant number of their forces from the theater of operations as they have trained and supported Afghans, but the Taliban have gained significant territory and have attempted to make Americans and their allies weary by occasionally killing their soldiers in order to encourage opposition to the War on Terrorism.  As a result of this global Islamist strategy, isolationism on both the far left and especially on the “nationalist” far right has increased, which encourages more killings of Americans by Islamists in Afghanistan and elsewhere, especially in places where strategic military victory is unlikely.  Before September 11, al-Qaeda had cited U.S. withdrawals from Vietnam, Lebanon and Somalia because of popular opposition, not military defeat, as examples encouraging this Islamist strategy. 

The political pressure to “end” the war in Afghanistan, as opposed to continuing to fight the Islamists to prevent them from being able to launch more attacks on the U.S. homeland, let alone of winning the war by defeating them decisively, led former U.S. President Barack Obama to begin negotiations with the Taliban, even though the Afghan Islamists had been state sponsors of terrorism.  His successor, Donald Trump, has continued the negotiations, without regard to the allied Afghan government, to surrender much of Afghanistan to the Taliban, which could allow al-Qaeda and other Islamists based there to become a greater threat not only to Americans abroad and U.S. interests, but once again to the American homeland.  It would further encourage Islamists who have been waging a war of conquest for 14 centuries that they have more resolve than the most powerful non-Muslim States and that the Islamist strategy of terrorism and guerilla attacks to kill soldiers, regardless of any strategic gains, to defeat military even great powers, which suggests that their violent jihad (Islamic holy war) is divinely-favored.  And it would discourage non-Islamist Muslims from allying with the United States and its allies.

To reduce the threat of Islamism and prevent another September 11-scale attack and to reduce or eliminate all terrorist and other violent jihadist attacks, it is necessary instead to defeat Islamists militarily, including the Taliban, especially in a decisive manner.

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